Newly engaged couple in the lobby of the Fort Garry Hotel Winnipeg — Ngo Photography
New Couples Guide · Winnipeg, Manitoba · 2026

Just Got Engaged?
Here's What to Do First.

April 2026
8 min read
By Chris Ngo

Congratulations. Seriously — take a moment and let it land. This guide isn't for couples who've been planning their wedding since they were twelve. It's for the ones who said yes last week and have no idea where to start. I've photographed hundreds of weddings across Winnipeg and Manitoba, and I've watched so many couples make the same costly mistake in those first few excited weeks. This is my honest answer to the question I wish every newly engaged couple would ask: what should we actually do first?

The first 24–48 hours. Just be engaged.

Before you open Pinterest, build a spreadsheet, or text your friends asking for vendor recommendations — just be present. The planning will take over soon enough. The first night you're engaged only happens once, and it goes by faster than you think.

There are only a few things worth doing in the first 48 hours:

  • 1
    Tell your close family before social media Your parents, siblings, and closest friends should hear it from you directly — not see it on Instagram. Make a few calls first. The announcement can wait an hour.
  • 2
    Take photos on your phone tonight The light, the energy, the way your partner looks at you in the hours after a proposal — that's something worth capturing. Your phone is enough. Don't overthink it.
  • 3
    Get your ring insured — this week Engagement rings are surprisingly easy to lose or damage in the first few months when you're not used to wearing one. Contact your home or tenant insurance provider. This is genuinely important and surprisingly easy to forget.
  • 4
    Celebrate before you plan Give yourself at least one weekend before the spreadsheets and venue tours begin. Go for dinner. Pop a bottle. Let the moment breathe. The planning will fill every available hour once it starts — enjoy the calm before.

The mistake almost every couple makes in week one.

Here's the pattern I see over and over again, and it breaks my heart every time.

A couple gets engaged on a Saturday. By Monday they're touring venues. They fall in love with a space in late June — the garden is perfect, the light in the ballroom is beautiful, the catering is included. They put down a deposit. The date is locked. They announce it on social media. Two weeks later, they start searching for photographers.

They find three they love. They email all three. All three are already booked for that date.

From Chris — honestly

I regularly receive four or five inquiries for the exact same date I'm already booked for. It happens every peak season. And the date is always already locked with the venue — non-negotiable. The couple is heartbroken. Sometimes they find someone else they're happy with. But sometimes they end up with a photographer they compromised on, and they carry that into their wedding day.

It doesn't have to work this way.

The reason this happens is simple: couples treat the venue and the photographer as two separate decisions, in sequence. Book the venue, lock the date, then look for a photographer. But a photographer — like a florist, a caterer, or a DJ — takes one wedding per day. We book out 12 to 18 months in advance for popular summer Saturdays. By the time most couples start searching, the best dates are already gone.

The fix — and it only takes one extra week

Before you commit to a venue date, contact two or three photographers whose work genuinely excites you. Share your ideal season and year. Ask about their availability. Once you find someone you love who's free, then lock the venue to a date they can be there.

That's it. It adds one week to your planning process. It changes everything about who you end up with on the most photographed day of your life.

"The photographer and the venue have to share the same date. Book the venue first and that date is non-negotiable. Check photographer availability first — and you get to choose."

Chris Ngo · Ngo Photography · Winnipeg
Engaged couple in the Fort Garry Hotel lobby — Ngo Photography Engaged couple at the Manitoba Legislative Building — Ngo Photography

The vendor booking order that actually makes sense.

Not all vendors are equal when it comes to how far in advance they book. Here's an honest priority order — written from the perspective of someone who has watched countless couples get the sequence wrong.

Book First — Together

Venue & Photographer

Both lock your date

These two decisions are inseparable — they share the same date, and both fill up fast. Contact 2–3 photographers you love before you sign with a venue. Not sure where to start? Read our guide to Winnipeg wedding venues to see real photos from every major venue in the city. Once you find a photographer available for your ideal season, lock the venue to that date. This is the one step that changes everything about who you end up with on your wedding day.

1

Officiant / Celebrant

Licensed officiants & celebrants

Most couples underestimate how quickly good officiants fill their calendars. Those who offer personalized ceremonies — rather than template scripts — book out fast for popular summer Saturdays. This should be your third call, right after confirming your venue and photographer.

2

Videographer & Band or DJ

One booking per day — great ones fill up

Like photographers, videographers and live bands take one event per day. They don't fill as fast, but the best ones do. If a live band matters to you, start earlier than you think. DJ availability is more flexible, but peak summer dates still go.

3

Florist & Hair and Makeup

Florist · Bridal hair stylist · Makeup artist

Florists and makeup artists handle multiple bookings per day but still have limits. Florists also need lead time for design consultations and sourcing. Your hair and makeup team needs enough runway to coordinate your full wedding party schedule.

4

Everything Else

Invitations · Cake · Décor · Favours · Transportation

These can all wait. Décor, favours, and table settings don't compete for limited availability. Don't let the small decisions consume energy that belongs to locking down the vendors who actually matter to your day.

5

Book your engagement session early — and don't skip it.

An engagement session isn't just "more photos." It's the single best investment you can make in the quality of your wedding day portraits.

The couples who feel the most natural and comfortable in front of the camera on their wedding day are almost always the ones who did an engagement session first. They've already been through the experience of being photographed together. They know how to move, how to settle in, what feels right. The nerves are already out of the way.

There's also something more personal at play. Your wedding day is the first time I meet you as a photographer in a real, working sense. If we've spent an afternoon together at a session beforehand, that relationship is already built. I know how you laugh. I know how you hold each other. Your wedding portraits look like the two of you — not two people being directed by a stranger.

Schedule your engagement session three to six months after your proposal if you can. Earlier is better. And if you're doing save-the-dates — which I highly recommend — timing the session about six months before your wedding gives you beautiful images to use on them.

Engaged couple dip in the Manitoba Legislative Building marble rotunda — Ngo Photography Engaged couple portrait on the Legislative Building grand staircase — Ngo Photography

Questions to ask a photographer before you book.

Not all photographers are the same, and price alone tells you very little. When you're evaluating someone to trust with your wedding day, these are the questions worth asking — and the answers worth paying attention to.

  • 1 Can I see a complete gallery from one real wedding — not just highlights?
  • 2 What happens if you're sick or injured on my wedding day?
  • 3 Do you carry backup camera bodies and lenses?
  • 4 How do you handle dark reception halls or low-light ceremonies?
  • 5 What is your editing style — and will my gallery look like your portfolio?
  • 6 How long until we receive our full gallery?
  • 7 Do you do a timeline consultation before the wedding?
  • 8 Are you the photographer who will actually be at my wedding, or do you sometimes send an associate?

The last one matters more than people realize. Some studios book under one photographer's name and send a different shooter on the day. Ask directly — it's completely fair to ask.

For a deeper look at what separates good photographers from great ones, and what the price differences in Winnipeg actually mean, read the complete Winnipeg wedding photographer cost guide →

Ngo Photography · Winnipeg

Check your date
before you lock it.

Tell me your ideal season and I'll let you know right away if I'm available — before you commit to anything with a venue.

Check My Date →
Frequently Asked Questions

Newly engaged —
your questions answered

Should I book the venue or the photographer first?

Contact your photographer before locking a venue date. Good photographers take one wedding per day and book out 12–18 months in advance. Find a photographer you love, confirm they're free for your ideal season, then sign with a venue on a date they're available. This simple order change takes an extra week and prevents the most common heartbreak in wedding planning.

How far in advance should I book a Winnipeg wedding photographer?

For peak season (June through September), most in-demand Winnipeg photographers are booked 12–18 months out. Popular Saturday dates in summer fill the fastest. If your wedding is within 6 months, reach out immediately — options exist but your first-choice photographer may not be available. For Ngo Photography availability, inquire here.

How many photographers should I contact?

Contact 2–3 photographers whose work genuinely excites you — not 10 for comparison. You're not shopping for the best price on a commodity. You're looking for someone whose vision aligns with yours, whose personality you trust, and who's available for your season. A short list of people you're actually drawn to leads to much better outcomes than a long list you spreadsheet.

Do I really need an engagement session?

Yes — and earlier is better. An engagement session gets you comfortable in front of a camera, builds real chemistry with your photographer before the wedding day, and gives you beautiful images for save-the-dates. Couples who skip engagement sessions often feel stiff during wedding portraits. It's one of the highest-ROI things you can do for your wedding photography.

What's the difference between a wedding photographer and a videographer — do I need both?

They capture your day in fundamentally different ways. Photos are still moments — edited, timeless, what you frame and hang. Video captures movement, voices, ambient sound, the vows as they were spoken. Many couples prioritize photos and add video when budget allows. If you're on the fence, most couples who skipped video say they wish they hadn't — but very few who invested in it regret it.

Is it too soon to reach out to vendors if we haven't set a date yet?

No — that's actually the ideal time. Reaching out before your date is locked gives you and your photographer flexibility to find a date that works for both of you. Most photographers are happy to discuss availability for a season or year, even before a specific date is chosen. Reach out here and just tell me your ideal month or season.